Thursday, February 20, 2020

Bloomberg Spent Hundreds of Millions to Get His Ass Kicked






Reader Supported News
20 February 20



Enough of lying politicians and yapping pundits. Enough of no real forums for the people to voice their opinions without name calling and fear of retribution. Enough chatter and lack of action.

I also had enough to donate for my second time this month ... and took advantage of the situation for my own peace of mind.

Kelly, RSN Reader, Supporter









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Reader Supported News
20 February 20

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Scott Bixby and Hunter Woodall, The Washington Post
Excerpt: "In a city that runs on cash, Mike Bloomberg learned that all the money in the world couldn't save him from an unrelenting pummeling from the 2020 field."
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Former Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich arrives at O'Hare International Airport following his release from prison on February 19, 2020. (photo: Nuccio DiNuzzo/Getty)
Former Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich arrives at O'Hare International Airport following his release from prison on February 19, 2020. (photo: Nuccio DiNuzzo/Getty)


Barbara McQuade | Trump's Pardons of Rod Blagojevich and Others Are Meant to Convince America Corruption Is OK
Barbara McQuade, NBC News
McQuade writes: "If actions speak louder than words, then President Donald Trump's granting of pardons Tuesday was deafening."
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Richard Grenell. (photo: Getty)
Richard Grenell. (photo: Getty)


Trump's New Acting Intelligence Chief Richard Grenell Lacks Intelligence Experience but He Is a Gold Trump Card Member
The Week
Excerpt: "President Trump confirmed Wednesday night that he is appointing Richard Grenell, the U.S. ambassador to Germany, as acting director of national intelligence. Current acting DNI Joseph Maguire, who would have had to step down by March 12 because he lacked Senate confirmation, 'was blindsided by the news.'"
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Sen. Bernie Sanders. (photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty)
Sen. Bernie Sanders. (photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty)


Medicare for All Would Save Billion Annually While Preventing 68,000 Deaths, New Study Shows
Jason Lemon, Newsweek
Lemon writes: "The Medicare For All plan proposed by Democratic presidential candidates Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren would save taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars each year and would prevent tens of thousands of unnecessary deaths, a new study shows."

EXCERPT:
Overall, the new research anticipates annual savings of about 13 percent in national health care costs, while providing better health care access to lower-income families. According to the study, about 37 million Americans do not have health insurance, while an additional 41 million people do not have adequate health care coverage. Taken together, about 24 percent of the total population does not have health care coverage that meets their needs.
"The entire system could be funded with less financial outlay than is incurred by employers and households paying for health-care premiums combined with existing government allocations," the authors wrote in the study.




Doña Amalia holds some of the family's immigration paperwork, which includes documents related to the family's attempt to get her grandchildren out of U.S. custody. (photo: Devyn Galindo/Reveal)
Doña Amalia holds some of the family's immigration paperwork, which includes documents related to the family's attempt to get her grandchildren out of U.S. custody. (photo: Devyn Galindo/Reveal)


The Disappeared: A North Carolina Family Has Tried for Six Years to Find Its Children Separated at the Border
Aura Bogado, Reveal
Bogado writes: "What I do know is that, after all these years, she wants out. She's come to court today to try and deport herself from the United States."

EXCERPT:
The girl’s story would have likely gone unknown outside of a few case managers and lawyers had I not come across a scrap of information a few months ago: A child had been in the system for six years, longer than any case I’d heard of. A girl from Honduras. I didn’t have much else to go on other than her full name and the name of the town where she grew up, but was told she had mentioned the first name of an aunt who had raised her. 
I knew that it was ORR policy not to speak to reporters about any individual child’s case. So I set out to find that aunt on my own, to see if she could help me piece together the girl’s story. I searched on Facebook for women in Honduras, then in Mexico and the United States, going through hundreds of searches. But she had a pretty common name, and I came up dry. So I started searching for anyone with the girl’s last name who lived in the small town where she grew up. And I finally stumbled upon a very distant relative who remembered something about a girl who’d gone to the United States and then went missing. And that person knew the aunt. 
It turns out the aunt wasn’t in Honduras. She was living in rural North Carolina, where I reached her by phone. She told me she was the girl’s sponsor, that she had put together all the paperwork to reunify the family and take custody of both the girl and her brother all the way back in 2013. But she never got the kids. She didn’t know why. Then, one day, less than a year and a half later, she couldn’t get in contact with them anymore. No one answered the phone number she usually dialed to connect with the kids, which belonged, she thought, to their case worker or case manager. And she said she never got a call from that number again. 
All these years, the girl didn’t know what had happened to her family. And the family didn’t know what had happened to their girl



In recent years, Germany has been experienced several far-right attacks. (photo: Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters)
In recent years, Germany has been experienced several far-right attacks. (photo: Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters)


'Right-Wing Extremist' Kills Ten in Attacks at Shisha Lounges in Germany
Al Jazeera
Excerpt: "The suspected perpetrator of two deadly gun attacks in Germany's Hanau city appeared to have had a far-right motive, according to German federal prosecutors and a state interior minister."
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Wolf mother with pups. (photo: Wolf Conservation Center)
Wolf mother with pups. (photo: Wolf Conservation Center)


Endangered Species Are Casualties of Trump's Border Wall
Garet Bleir, Sierra Club
Bleir writes: "As new border wall construction rips through some of the most biologically diverse desert lands in North America, it is putting nearly 100 endangered species at increased risk."

The habitats for jaguars, ocelots, and wolves are being cut in half

s new border wall construction rips through some of the most biologically diverse desert lands in North America, it is putting nearly 100 endangered species at increased risk. “I think many people still don't realize that the border wall—in addition to being a despicable racist symbol of Trump's hateful border policies—also will wipe some species off the face of the planet and have irreversible environmental impacts, changing these places forever,” says Laiken Jordahl, borderlands campaigner for the Center for Biological Diversity. Jordahl has traveled the extent of the US-Mexico borderlands advocating against border wall construction and routinely posts updates on social media about the topic. 
Before the Trump administration came to power in 2017, there were already approximately 650 miles of barriers in place along the roughly 2,000-mile-long US-Mexico border. While some Democratic party leaders have sought to downplay the extent of border wallwal construction—apparently in an attempt to snatch away from Trump one of his main campaign pledges—the ongoing construction does present a new threat to desert ecosystems, Jordahl says. “DHS is replacing tiny vehicle barriers—which wildlife and water could pass through with total ease—with a massive solid wall that will stop every single species of wildlife larger than a pocket mouse in its tracks.”
The Trump administration has already put in place 119 miles of new border fortifications and has plans for a total of 576 miles of wall —450 of which it expects to have completed by the end of this year —using over $11 billion in taxpayer money. The administration has now notified Congress it is diverting another $3.8 billion dollars from the Pentagon budget in order to wall off hundreds of more miles—a move that critics say is unconstitutional. (The Sierra Club is the lead plaintiff in a suit challenging the constitutionality of the border wall funding.)
To those unfamiliar with the borderlands of the Southwest, mention of the region may conjure images of a vast desert wasteland. In reality, the US-Mexico borderlands are some of the most biodiverse wildlands in North America.
Across most of the United States, such landscapes and the endangered and threatened species living within them would be protected under federal and state regulations. But using the powers available to it under a post-9/11 security law called the Real ID Act, the Trump administration has waived dozens of critical environmental safeguards along the border, including the Endangered Species Act, the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act, and the National Environmental Policy Act. That has left public interest watchdog groups with few legal opportunities to challenge the administration’s activities.
Here is a short list of some of the species that are being harmed or whose habitats are being fragmented as the Trump administration bulldozes the desert.
Saguaro Cactus:
Jordahl has witnessed destruction firsthand in Organ Pipe National Monument, parts of which are being razed to build a 30-foot-high wall in spite of the area’s status as federally designated wilderness. The Border Patrol and its contractors have bulldozed some 30 miles along the southern end of the park, and in the process have killed hundreds, if not thousands, of saguaro cacti, a signature plant of the Sonoran Desert. “Saguaros are being destroyed, chopped up like firewood, and discarded into trash heaps—all on sacred lands of the Tohono O'odham who actively use the area for ceremonial purposes,” Jordahl says.  One site in the National Monument —Monument Hill, a sacred burial site of the Tohono O’odam people— is being blown up to make way for the border wall.
Under Arizona law, if someone is found guilty of damaging or cutting down a saguaro, they could face felony charges and up to a 25-year prison sentence. Now, the Trump Administration is literally bulldozing them in a national monument. “We’re watching the destruction of a national treasure,” Jordahl says. “It's heartbreaking.”
Mexican Gray Wolf
A subspecies of the gray wolf, the Mexican gray wolf is the southernmost wolf in North America, the smallest of its species (ranging from 50 to 80 pounds), and also among the most endangered. Historically, the predator roamed throughout the borderlands of southwestern US and into northern Mexico. Today, the core of the US population straddles the the border between New Mexico and Arizona, with many finding home in the Gila Wilderness of New Mexico.
In the late 1970s, under a binational effort by the US and Mexico to save the species, seven Mexican gray wolves were captured and bred in captivity. Today, all living Mexican gray wolves are descended from those seven—putting the species at risk of a genetic bottleneck. The population of wild Mexican gray wolves in the United States currently totals 131, while the population in Mexico is around 20 to 30, says Maggie Howell of the Wolf Conservation Center. While the populations of wild wolves may be the largest it has ever been since its reintroduction in the late 1990s, it’s also significantly inbred.
As border wall construction pushes forward, wolf populations are at risk of being fragmented, thus reducing the chances that the subspecies may recover a healthy genetic diversity. “And the larger [the population] gets, the harder it will be to perform a genetic rescue to the wild population—which is basically all brothers and sisters now,” she adds.
Biologists say it is imperative for the wolves’ survival that the subpopulations in the United States and Mexico expand and are able to cross the US-Mexico border to breed with each other. In 2016, conservationists’ dreams of uniting these two populations seemed imminent when a wolf from the Mexico subpopulation ventured across the border into the United States, where he remained for a few days before returning to Mexico. Just a year later, in 2017, a female wolf crossed the border as well. “What these wolves did—and these are just the wolves we know about —is proved there is hope to connect these two subpopulations,” Howell says.
Then came the new border wall construction. “Now any wolves migrating north from Mexico or south from the US will find an impenetrable wall in their path,” Jordahl says. “They’ve already completed a huge amount of border wall in New Mexico and we’re seeing it cut off all possible migratory path for the wolf there, save a few high elevation corridors in the boot heel.”
“The fact that something everybody in the recovery of Mexican gray wolves is working towards, is now literally being blocked off…I’m feeling the devastation to this subspecies,” Howell says. “We are blocking off a chance for these animals to one day be a self-sustaining, healthy, recovered population.”
Jaguar
Elsewhere along the border roams the jaguar, the spotted big cat that is the third largest cat in the world and the largest one native to North America. Jaguars are typically found all the way from the Brazilian Amazon through to their northernmost reaches of the Sky Islands of Arizona and New Mexico, where conservationists are working to restore the jaguar to their traditional territory. Listed as endangered and protected in both the United States and Mexico, one of the main jaguar recovery goals is to allow the species to roam between the two countries. At least seven jaguars have been documented in Arizona within the past 20 years – three of them in just the past several years. But, just as with the Mexican gray wolf, border wall construction threatens to stall the species recovery.
Arizona canyons, riparian corridors, and rivers crossing the border are used by jaguars, says Sergio Avila, a big cat wildlife biologist who now works for the Sierra Club. It was in Sky Islands outside of Tucson, Arizona where El Jefe —the most publicized jaguar in the United States —was frequently photographed. There have been other sightings of jaguars just north of the border in the Huachuca Mountains and Dos Cabezas Mountains; and Avila himself has photographed jaguars about 35 miles southeast of Nogales on the southern side of the border.
“All these little dots on the map, basically let you see that, One: jaguars are using the Sky Islands,” Avila says. “Two: they're moving back and forth from the border. And Three: any construction and any activities of law enforcement along that region of the border would definitely impact the movements of jaguars.”
Avila is quick to note that border militarization’s impacts on jaguar and other wildlife go beyond the physical wall. Birds and animals are also impacted by the associated truck traffic, cranes, and machines used to build that wall—as well as the helicopters, roads, patrols, checkpoints, lights, and generators used in militarizing the southern border. “Without ever getting to see the border wall, the jaguars would not use those areas anymore because of all the movement before, during, and after construction,” Avila says. “This all amounts to destruction of public lands and is happening in places that jaguars could use or have used.”
Ocelot:
The Tamaulipan thornscrub of the Rio Grande Valley is the native habitat of the ocelot —cinnamon-colored, spotted cat that weighs around 30 pounds and is sometimes referred to as the “dwarf leopard.” Biologists estimate that there are a scant 50 ocelots left in the United States. Their recovery is complicated by the fact that less than one percent of the species’ native habitat remains intact within South Texas—and border wall construction threatens to destroy even more. As border wall construction continues through the Lower Rio Grande Valley National Wildlife Refuge—a constellation of nearly 150 wildlife refuge tracts connecting pockets of wildlife in the valley—the opportunities for the Ocelot in Texas to connect and breed with the populations in Mexico are becoming slimmer.
 “This is a death sentence because they have nowhere to go,” Avila says. “They have no connections, no genetic inter-breeding, and will be impacted by habitat destruction.”
In addition to Texas, five ocelot have now been spotted in Arizona since 2009. Researchers believe they came from a population located just south of the border in the Mexican state of Sonora. That is where, in the early 2000s, Avila and other research were granted permission by a private ranch to set up cameras to photograph jaguar— which they did successfully several years later. But the cameras also captured footage of another protected species: the ocelot. This “made the rancher’s heart melt,” Avila recalls. “It made him commit directly to conservation. He expressed his love for this species and in that moment he saw the photograph, he said ‘I'm going to remove all the cattle I have in that canyon, because from now on this canyon will be the ‘Canyon of the Ocelot.’” The ranch was eventually designated as a protected national area in Mexico.
Avila’s team identified 18 different ocelots over eight years. Most importantly, the team documented photos of kittens, proving that there were both males and females in the area— the northernmost known wild breeding population of ocelot. This research led to a critical addition to the recovery plan for ocelots, which originally did not consider the Arizona-Sonoran subpopulation of Ocelot.
Last year, however, the Department of Homeland Security announced plans for a 26-mile stretch of border wall just north of this ocelot population. While those plans were put on hold due to insufficient funds, Trump’s recent victory in securing $7 billion in funds for border wall construction may put those plans back into action.
As with other species, the road construction, Border Patrol traffic, lighting, noise, and air pollution that comes with border militarization also makes life more difficult for ocelots.  “All of these things combined create impacts far beyond the physical footprint of the wall,” says ocelot biologist Jessica Moreno. “Ocelots are very sensitive to those kinds of disturbances, so they would not even try to cross. So a wall hampers all of our investments in protecting land on both sides for the recovery of the Ocelot in Arizona.”
Peninsular Bighorn Sheep:
Inhabiting dry and rocky desert slopes, canyons and washes ranging from the San Jacinto and Santa Rosa mountains of California all the way south to Baja California, Mexico, the endangered Peninsular bighorn sheep finds itself under threat from a combination of border wall construction and other development in its core habitat. This development threatens to further fragment habitat connectivity and isolate the remnants of the species from each other. The San Diego Zoo Institute for Conservation and Research is conducting research exploring cross-border connectivity between Peninsular bighorn sheep populations, and its 2012 population survey showed a much larger population of bighorns just south of the border than had been expected.
During the past two centuries, this subspecies of bighorn sheep has suffered from habitat loss, disease, and overhunting. By the 1990s, its population dipped to as low as 276 animals, and it was placed on the endangered species list in 1998. While the population has since rebounded in the United States and is recovering in Mexico, careful management of the species is needed to continue the recovery. “We’re at a stage where there are around 800 Peninsular bighorn [in the US] and that's been a slow process getting back,” says Jim DeForge, executive director of the Bighorn Institute. “That number has been going up and down.”
Connectivity across landscapes is vital for the Peninsular bighorn sheep to flourish, according to a cross-border collaborative study between the San Diego Zoo Institute for Conservation and Research and the Universidad Autónoma de Baja California. The study determined the species has retained a “substantial genetic variation,” but that border wall construction or further development along the border “could have severe consequences” on the species’ demographics and genetic diversity as a whole and increase the extinction risk of the subpopulation spanning the border.
Aquatic Species:
Not only is the border wall construction bulldozing protected flora, it also threatens desert aquifers like the one feeding Organ Pipe National Monument’s Quitobaquito Springs. Some environmental researchers and activists say the DHS’s massive ground water withdrawals for concrete mixing is reckless and threatens this unique oasis.
Quitobaquito Springs is the only habitat in the world of the Quitobaquito pumpfish and one of just two habitats of the Sonoyta mud turtle. Border wall contractors are extracting water from the aquifer that feeds the springs; and while no one knows exactly how much, some estimates project that as much as 50 million gallons of groundwater may be required for border wall construction on the Arizona border.
Several hundred miles east of Organ Pipe, similar rare aquatic resources at the San Bernardino National Wildlife Refuge are also in peril. There, DHS is drawing water from aquifers that are the sources of aquatic habitats called ciénegas—a type of desert wetland. The San Bernardino ciénegas are home to four endangered species of Yaqui fish: the topminnow, catfish, slider, and chub, which live nowhere else in the United States. “We could see these habitats—the entire habitats for all of the Yaqui fish—wiped off the face of the map in the next year or number of months,” Jordahl from the Center for Biological Diversity says. “It's so heartbreaking to see them sucking up this groundwater—a non-renewable resource in the desert…much of which dates back to the Ice Age…and which would never be allowed if it wasn’t for the waiver of the Endangered Species Act. Giant tanker trucks fill up at the wells all day long, taking out 112,000 gallons of water each shift.”
“They don't have to suck the entire aquifer dry to damage the springs,”Jordahl adds. Just by dropping the water table by a foot or two, water flow to the springs may stop or slow, in the process destroying the ciénegas. This would mean death for not only the endangered aquatic species, but would also jeopardize all species that depend on the water there, including the endangered Chiricahua leopard frog, endangered northern Mexican garter snake, protected desert tortoises, as well as other birds and mammals that drink from these pools.



















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